Air Warfare

MQ-25 tanker drone flight this year will require ‘ton of work,’ warns NAVAIR head

Vice Adm. Carl Chebi suggested program officials needed to ramp up discussions about pre-flight issues if they want to see the MQ-25 in flight before the end of the year.

GHWB Operates the MQ-25 Aircraft
A Boeing unmanned MQ-25 aircraft is given operating directions on the flight deck aboard the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77). (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Brandon Roberson)

SEA AIR SPACE 2025 — Boeing’s MQ-25 tanker drone is set to make its first flight some time this year, but the head of Naval Air Systems Command warned that here is “a ton of work” to do before takeoff.

“We’re going to fly this thing this year,” Vice Adm. Carl Chebi said during a Tuesday panel at the Sea Air Space conference. “There’s a lot of work right now, a lot of tough discussions going to happen over the next couple of months, for us to fly the thing in 2025.”

Production delays have pushed the initial operational capability milestone for the MQ-25 Stingray to fiscal 2025 — a delay of about a year, USNI News reported in 2023. But despite the headwinds, the program appears to be inching to a key target of flying the aircraft for the first time in 2025 ahead of its first flight off a carrier in 2026.

RELATED: MQ-25 will fly in 2025, fly off carriers in 2026

Chebi said that there is a “lot of confidence” in the 2025 date, but that much will depend on whether the Navy and Boeing can identify and remove any “barriers” that come up during pre-flight testing.

“Is that truly a requirement? Do I need to do that test before I field it, or can do it later? Those discussions must occur right now,” he said. “My perspective: They are happening at too low a level, and we have too many folks saying ‘No, we don’t have the authority to say yes.’”

Vice Adm. Daniel Cheever, commander of Naval Air Forces, said he has seen improvement in Boeing’s execution since the company made leadership changes that included the appointment of Dan Gillian as the company’s vice president for air dominance technologies.

“I’ve already seen his team swarm quickly on things, to solve things that maybe before might have taken a month or two months and were solved in days or weeks or less,” Cheever, known as “Air Boss” due to his standing as the Navy’s top operational aviator, told Breaking Defense after the panel. “So I’m seeing this thing accelerate, and personally, I’m just getting more and more excited about it, because I see the end of the rainbow here, where I’m actually flying the MQ-25 off the carrier.”

Gillian acknowledged that there had been “hard discussions about where we’ve been, where we needed to be” when he came on board but that the data indicates that the flight date is possible.

“Air Boss came out and said, ‘That’s our objective. Let’s go make that happen.’ And it’s helped the team rally,” he said. “There’s a lot of hard discussions to have, because any time you’re taking an airplane like this to flight and in the test for the first time, it’s a big undertaking, it’s a complex problem. I am confident that we have the relationships and the discussions happening in real time all the time, so that as problems come up, because they will, that we’ll be able to solve them.”

The MQ-25 is designed to take over the refueling missions for the carrier air wing, allowing the Super Hornet to focus on its strike mission instead of having to refuel other fighters. The tanker drone will also carry out intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations as a secondary role, and Boeing executives have touted potential future MQ-25 modifications that would allow it to carry weapons.

A demonstrator version of the MQ-25 first flew in 2019, but the aircraft slated to make its first flight this year is “significantly different,” having been built to last the Navy decades, Gillian said.

PHOTOS: Sea Air Space 2025

PHOTOS: Sea Air Space 2025

The Terradepth booth located outside on the Sea Air Space plaza showcased what it called its autonomous underwater submarine and Absolute Ocean platform solution. According to Terradepth, "Absolute Ocean is a secure seabed data management platform designed to enable real-time access, collaboration, and analysis of subsea data." (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Spotted at Sea Air Space 2025, Kracken's Katfish 180 is a "high speed, actively stabilized Synthetic Aperture Sonar towfish that operates at speeds up to 10 knots." (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Kongsberg was at Sea Air Space 2025, presenting a 1-1 replica of the Joint Strike Missile. The Norwegian firm says it is designed to deal with threats both on land and at sea. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Leidos' latest unveiling at Sea Air Space 2025, the SEA DART UUV is an affordable underwater vessel that doesn't compromise on capability. It is set to tackle a variety of mission sets from military operations to scientific pursuits, the company said. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
BAE Systems BOFORS 40 MK 4 Naval Gun System can "go from warning to destruction in less than 0.5 seconds." The company said weapon, on display at Sea Air Space 2025, is automatically loaded and can be both remotely and locally controlled. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Northrop Grumman said its SEWIP BLOCK 3, on display at Sea Air Space 2025, iterates on previous versions bringing electronic attack capabilities to defend against anti ship missiles and offers hopes of future proofing for integration with AI and machine learning. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
A surprise announcement was made by General Atomics on Day 1 of Sea Air Space 2025 regarding their new long range precision guided Bullseye Missile, a partnership with Israel Defense contractor Rafael. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
One of the busiest areas of the floor at Sea Air Space 2025 belonged to the Australian contingent at a time of uncertainty in international collaboration. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Shield AI shows off its V Bat vertical-takeoff unmanned system at Sea Air Space 2025. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
A quadcopter unmanned aerial vehicle, the TRV-150c, sits on display at Maryland-based Survice Engineering Company's booth at Sea Air Space 2025. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Ahead of Sea Air Space 2025, Anduril announced a new unmanned underwater system dubbed Copperhead. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
At Leonardo's booth at Sea Air Space 2025 sits a radar from its Gabbiano family of systems. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Unmanned tech company firm Saildrone shows off its Voyager USV at Sea Air Space 2025. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
The American arm of British defense MSI-Defence Systems attended Sea Air Space 2025, displaying its MK38 automated naval gun, which is in currently in service with the Navy. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Attendees at Sea Air Space 2025 may pass by the curiously, almost fish-like shape of Aevex's Mako Lite, what the company calls "a rugged, low-visibility" unmanned surface vessel. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)